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ANKARA: Newspapers And Authorities Bicker Over Dink Murder

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  • ANKARA: Newspapers And Authorities Bicker Over Dink Murder

    NEWSPAPERS AND AUTHORITIES BICKER OVER DINK MURDER

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 6 2007

    Truth may be the second casualty after the fatal shooting of editor
    Hrant Dink outside the offices of his own newspaper on Jan. 19.

    Newspapers competing to cover the story have come up with different
    version of events.

    In comments published in the press, Justice Minister Cemil Cicek
    warned of a campaign of deliberate misinformation and of the dangers
    that the police enquiry is now turning into "a war of retribution."

    However, newspaper watchdogs blame the authorities themselves for
    not providing a reliable stream information about a story vital to
    the public interest. "It is apparent there is a power game within
    the security apparatus and that reporters are having a hard time
    uncovering the truth. Add to this a traditional governmental lack of
    transparency, and you end up with information and allegations flying
    about in the air," according to Yavuz Baydar, ombudsman for Sabah
    newspaper. The Istanbul police have now urged caution in newspapers'
    attempt to depict a second assailant at the scene of the crime.

    Several papers have identified a man photographed at the time Dink's
    body was being placed in the ambulance as Yasin Hayal, a person
    who confessed to having recruited 17-year-old Ogun Samast to commit
    the crime.

    Aykut Cengiz Engin, an Ýstanbul state prosecutor, said the man in the
    picture taken by The Associated Press was in fact a police officer
    from the homicide bureau.

    Radikal newspaper, which has a record of pursuing stories to do
    with state corruption, declared itself "happy to be corrected"
    when its account of preferential treatment for Samast after he was
    arrested proved to be untrue. The paper cited eyewitness accounts
    in Ýstanbul's Bayrampaþa Prison that he was given special bedding,
    kebabs to eat and a room all of his own. Penal authorities in say
    that Samast was being held in isolation in deference to his age. Far
    from having silk embroidered quilt covers, he was denied any bedding
    at all out of fear he might use it to do himself harm.

    Vakit, a newspaper of the religious nationalist right, has accused a
    cartel of media bosses of conspiring to muddy the waters around the
    crime. Such an interpretation, however, is just not fair, according
    to Radikal columnist Professor Haluk Þahin. Many of the leaks were
    the work of institutions trying to outmaneuver their organizational
    rivals. "The Turkish media is intensely competitive, and there is great
    pressure to be first with the news even at the expense of confirming
    that the story is a hundred percent accurate," Þahin said.

    Ombudsman Baydar: "The main problem is that there is not a regular
    flow of information from a central authority, say, a police
    spokesperson. This leaves eager reporters and honest editors adrift.

    They have no reference whatsoever to compare all other information
    that comes to them.

    He added that certain segments of press, due to the "sensitive"
    character of the assassination, were willing to play along with certain
    circles that put politics before the rule of law. "It is hard to tell
    if the 'honest' segments of press will win in the end, but for sure
    we will find out a lot about the crime itself," Baydar said.

    Editorial writers have also come in for criticism. There is now a
    petition circulating among academics in the United States accusing
    among others Hurriyet Editor-in-Chief Ertuðrul Ozkok of intemperate
    remarks about Zaman columnist Etyen Mahcupyan. Mahcupyan, like Dink,
    is of Armenian origin.

    The petition refers to press coverage as "irresponsible," "unethical"
    and "dangerous." A proposed draft of the petition warns that Mahcupyan
    has been quoted selectively in order to misrepresent his message.

    Milliyet columnist Hasan Pulur likened Mahcupyan to an Armenian who
    once struck a helpless Turkish officer as he was being led away by
    a guard of allied soldiers when Istanbul was under foreign occupation.

    The officer told the man to "hit him again" but that he would get
    what was coming to him in the end. The fear is that by questioning
    Mahcupyan's patriotism, the press is setting him up as a potential
    target as well.

    --Boundary_(ID_wQ7RgP8JSz4aO4DS+0FYMA)--
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